Archives about stack books like this

Forget Thanksgiving. I decided to theme November “Food Month” based on my discovery of a book called Grand Forks—a collection of restaurant reviews by the prolific Marilyn Hagerty, whose food column “Eatbeat” has been a staple in local paper The Grand Forks Herald since the mid-1980s. Hagerty gained some notoriety in 2012 for an Olive Garden

I grew up in New England, where ghost folklore is as culturally integrated as pizza or lighthouses or the history of Thanksgiving. Our small universe was multilayered in the troubled history of the dead. We found it in the farmhouses with foundations built from stacked stones, the boneyards dating back to yellow fever, the remains of cobblestone

Aisha Sabatini Sloan wrote the book I wished I could have read back when I was an undergraduate film student at Rhode Island College, buried neck-high in a dense thicket of film theory. The essays in her debut, The Fluency of Light, reveal a series of confluences between the personal and the cultural, shifting between

Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2012 Reviewed by Candace Opper “In Europe, the words ‘thief’ and ‘swindler’ are synonymous with ‘Romani,’ and the conflicts between cultures often end in violence. The roots of this animosity span centuries, and trying to make sense of them would take up an entire book on its own.” When Oksana Marafioti

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